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The Complaining and Bitching Thread

Discussion in 'General Discussions' started by ASU2003, Jan 14, 2013.

  1. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    A friend went to LSU for his undergrad and claims that is what he misses the most about Louisiana.
     
  2. Street Pattern

    Street Pattern Very Tilted

    Well, for crying out fucking loud.

    God damn these colonial New Englanders for creating incredible confusion for historians.

    You see, some time in the seventeenth century, in Connecticut, Stephen Freeman and Hannah Astwood got married, and had a daughter, Sarah Freeman. Sarah Freeman married Thomas Judd, son of William Judd, and had a son, William Judd.

    Sounds totally normal, no?

    But just once wasn't enough. They did it all TWICE.

    Stephen Freeman (born 1580) married Hannah Astwood (born 1584), and had a daughter, Sarah Freeman (born 1612). Sarah Freeman married Thomas Judd (born 1608), son of William Judd (born 1583), and had a son William Judd (born 1636).

    Stephen Freeman (born 1630) married Hannah Astwood (born 1640), and had a daughter, Sarah Freeman (born 1669). Sarah Freeman married Thomas Judd (born 1667), son of William Judd (born 1636), and had a son William Judd (born 1689).

    A few of those birthyears are approximate, but you get the idea.

    And yeah, the 1636-born William Judd is the same guy in both scenarios.

    What are the odds of all this happening by chance? Connecticut in 1680 had less than 10,000 people.

    Sure, a lot of them were named Stephen and Hannah and Sarah and Thomas and William.

    But Astwood?

    I was thinking somebody must have transcribed a bunch of this stuff wrong.

    But the more I look, the more actual documentation I find for BOTH sets of circumstances.
     
    Last edited: Dec 8, 2013
  3. mixedmedia

    mixedmedia ...

    Location:
    Florida
    Ugh, I'm done studying for today. Gonna hit the sack early, watch some American Horror Story and get a good night's sleep.
    One full day of studying left before mental health final on Tuesday.
    Sleepy...
     
    • Like Like x 1
  4. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    I just had a diagnostic spinal injection procedure called a 'selective nerve root block' on three nerves in my back.

    It was even less fun than it sounds (and than I thought it would be).

    I was picturing a couple of local injections to numb me then a couple big needle injections that I wouldn't feel, similar to a cortisone shot.

    Nope. 9 or 12 local injections to numb me. Then at least 6 big needle injections that were x-ray guided to make sure they hit a nerve. The spasms caused by needle colliding with nerve were not fun even with the local anesthetic.

    The best part is that, if my symptoms fit the proposed diagnosis, I get to do it all over again next week to confirm it.
     
  5. hamsterball

    hamsterball Seeking New Outlets

    Tired of lying around in bed all of the time. The Martian Death Flu is slowly relaxing its grip on me.
     
  6. mixedmedia

    mixedmedia ...

    Location:
    Florida

    What is the proposed diagnosis?
     
  7. RedSneaker

    RedSneaker Very Tilted

    That sounds like a blast. Glad you made it through. Sorry you have to do it again so soon.
     
  8. GeneticShift

    GeneticShift Show me your everything is okay face.

    My best friend drew a bad genetic hand and ended up with degenerative disc disease. She's had several fusion surgeries, but is still in immense amount of pain. She's had several nerve blocks in her lower back, which help for about 4 months at a time. I've gone with her to several of the injections, and seeing it happen is insane. I can only imagine her and your pain, since I've seen how much those suck to get.
     
  9. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member


    I've had chronic back pain for a long time, 10 years or more. I have one "mildly to moderately" herniated disc down low (L1 I think?) and one disc higher up (T8 or T9?) that has more degeneration than it should and some arthritis in it. All of this was true in an MRI 8-9 years ago and confirmed in another MRI last month.

    However, based on my symptoms and reaction to physical therapy (went about 12 times last month) he feels the real cause of my pain is my facet joints rubbing together in the lumbar region. Today he shot me with novocaine in three nerves on each side. He purposefully didn't tell me the dosage ("this should work for x-hours") but wants me to keep a diary of how I feel tonight, and wants me to purposefully do a few things that would normally cause increased pain. If my pain diary matches the dosage he gave me (i.e. "I felt relief for 4 hours, even with activity" and he dosed me with enough to give relief for 4 hours) then he does it all over again next week. If my pain diary again matches the dosage, then he'll consider a treatment of just killing those nerves with (IIRC) RF beams. This should give me relief for 9-18 months. During that time my back may heal up and I never need it again, or it may be something I decide is worth getting done once every year or so.

    We'll see. I just shoveled the driveway, which would normally put my back at a solid 7-8 on the pain scale. I'd say I hit a 3-4. So something is doing something in there.
    --- merged: Dec 9, 2013 at 6:28 PM ---


    When the doc goes "WOW your back muscles are tight!" and "This is hurting way worse than it should because of how tight your back muscles, I can't believe how tight they are!" I consider that a bad sign.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 16, 2013
  10. mixedmedia

    mixedmedia ...

    Location:
    Florida
    Is that radiofrequency ablation? We haven't learned about it school. I just had to look it up. It seems like a relatively safe procedure. Are you hoping that you 'get a match'? What would your alternative be?
     
  11. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member


    Yes, RF ablation, that's it.

    I do hope it is a match at this point. If it means relief, even with annual procedures, I'm all for it.

    Not sure what Plan B would be yet.
     
  12. mixedmedia

    mixedmedia ...

    Location:
    Florida
    Well, then I hope you get a match, too. I have intermittent pain from a progressive arthritis thing in my neck. I have such lovely things to look forward to as well, no doubt.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  13. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    Great. Apparently the print shop didn't have my poster when my thesis advisor went to collect them. Guess I'm glad there's an extra few days to get this sorted out. I wonder what the hell happened, as I submitted with plenty of time for printing.
     
  14. Hope all of this ends in you getting some sustained relief, @Borla.

    In other news, I miss the Florida sunshine... and other aspects.

    My boss has offered my assistant manager another position with the company. Am I wrong to feel that he should have given me a little bit of a "heads up" on the situation? I mean, I am going to have some things to deal with if my AM takes the job, after all.
    If he does, I wish him all of the best. He's a good man, and he could run his own store, maybe better than I. But I don't think that is what they offered. I hope he makes the best decision for him and his family.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  15. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    Thank you both. Assuming the block was scheduled for 3-4 hours, it worked. I went out and shoveled the snow, usually something that leaves me in a lot of pain, and felt pretty good. Almost normal. Felt great for about 3 hours, then over the course of the next hour my pain cranked up, to what it normally would be after shoveling the snow. Ouch. But I am guessing that means the diagnosis was accurate, and RF ablation may be for me.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  16. Remixer

    Remixer Middle Eastern Doofus

    Location:
    Frankfurt, Germany
    Woah, didn't realize your back issues were that bad.

    Wish you the best possible outcome from your treatment, Borla. :)
     
    • Like Like x 1
  17. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    Thanks man. :cool:

    I have a pretty decent pain tolerance and whining doesn't help anything, so I tend to just deal with it the best I can and move on. Lots of people have it worse than me. If this gives me some relief I'll be awesome.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  18. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member


    I hear you. I'd love to go get a full workup done on my back at some point, but I'm honestly a little scared, if I'm frank. I really don't want to find out if my scoliosis has gotten worse, but I would like to get some help with my chronic sciatica.
     
  19. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    I've basically dealt with it for most of the last 8-9 years, with the occasional 'script for pain meds when it really flared up. I tried getting it treated about 10-12 years ago but basically got the answer of "you are too young for me to recommend surgery, so try to hold out for a while and see if technology/age makes it where something breaks loose one way or another". I'm glad I finally decided to revisit getting it treated. It was starting to degenerate to the point where it was becoming a daily factor in what choices I made as far as activities. I have been measuring out "is it worth the pain?" too often lately. Hopefully this gets me over that hump. I'm optimistic it will.
     
  20. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    I'm at the point where I have to engage in certain activities to keep my back functional. Skipping them is not an option--foam rolling, stretching, yoga. If I skip, my back will spasm or I'll have a sciatica flare-up. It sucks, but it's what I have to do. I'm just hoping I don't end up like my dad--spinal stenosis.